Rachmaninoff: Études-tableaux,
Op. 39; Moments musicaux, Op. 16. Boris Giltburg, piano. Naxos. $12.99.
Sebastiano Meloni: Moods and
Sketches—12 Improvisations for Piano. Sebastiano Meloni, piano. Big Round
Records. $14.99.
Betty R. Wishart: Sonata; Sonata
II; Toccata II; Toccata III; Night Visions Suite; Variations on a Folk Melody;
Remembrance. Jeri-Mae G. Astolfi, piano. Ravello. $14.99.
Margaret Brandman: Orchestral and
chamber music. Navona. $14.99.
Sometimes the pleasures of a
recording lie in simply hearing the performer’s mastery of his instrument. That
is the case with Boris Giltburg’s new Naxos CD of music by Rachmaninoff.
Giltburg here offers the second set of Études-tableaux together with the
six Moments musicaux, and his
readings are equally impressive in two very different ways. For the Études-tableaux,
Giltburg produces what are in effect nine miniature tone poems: he treats each
of the works as wholly independent of the others and makes no attempt to imply
that there is any connection among them. This is a reasonable position to take
with the earlier set of Études-tableaux, Op. 33, which
were intended by Rachmaninoff to evoke specific unnamed scenes. But Op. 39 is a
bit different: here Rachmaninoff, writing what was to be his final major work
created in Russia, was influenced in significant ways by the music of Scriabin
and (to a lesser extent) Prokofiev, and elements of those composers’ styles
filter into these pieces through Rachmaninoff’s own sensibilities. In any case,
what Giltburg primarily offers here is outstanding technique. In No. 1, he does
a fine job with the constant motion of the right hand against syncopations in
the left. In No. 5, his hands are wide enough to span the considerable distances
required. In No. 6, the opening low octave runs contrast strikingly with the treble
figures that are transformed into a march. In No. 8, the contrast between the
primarily legato melodic lines and
the staccato central section is
especially well handled. In all, Giltburg shows sensitivity to Rachmaninoff’s
tone painting as well as enough technique to make the music sound unforced. In
the much earlier Moments musicaux
(the two works’ dates are embarrassingly reversed on the CD: in reality, Op. 39
dates to 1916-17 and Op. 16 to 1896), Giltburg easily surmounts the technical
difficulties of the forms in which Rachmaninoff casts the pieces – nocturne,
barcarolle, song without words, theme and variations and so forth – and
penetrates to the emotional content that the composer offers within the various
formal structures. The third piece, for example, is a somber funeral march, but
Rachmaninoff marks it Andante cantabile,
scarcely the expected tempo indication for something funereal. Giltburg has no
apparent difficulty with this potential contradiction, and the result is a
stirring performance. From the extended reflective melody of the first piece to
the thick texture of the last, Giltburg shows that he has thought through the
way in which form and communicative function interact in the Moments musicaux and has, as a result,
helped the music express itself to listeners in a clear and direct way.
Sebastian Meloni seeks
similar clarity and directness of expression in his performance of his own Moods and Sketches on a new CD from Big
Round Records. He does not quite find it, though, because while the titles of
the 12 movements he calls “Improvisations” point in specific directions, the
music does not always go there. “Transparencies,” for example, is not
especially transparent; there is nothing very streamlike about “Stream,” whose
stop-and-start progress is a stylistic quirk of the composer; and “Dark and
Gloomy” is neither. On the other hand, “Mood Swings” does have the sort of
variety and contrast that its title indicates, and “Mutations” is changeable
enough to justify what it is called (although it is certainly not any sort of
theme and variations). Other movements are called “Awakening,” “From a
Distance,” “Point Particle,” “Inside/Outside,” “Filament,” and “Waves.” The
very last movement is intriguingly titled “Absence,” but the title means
nothing unless it refers to the fact that the music just stops when Meloni is
finished playing it – in fact, this gently rhythmic movement is the most
stylistically consistent of the 12, so if there is an absence of anything, it
is of contrast. Meloni makes a fine advocate for his own material on this (+++)
CD, but the music itself, which is intended to explore improvisational
techniques, does not communicate very much to listeners – although it may be of
particular interest to pianists who want to study and absorb the methods that
Meloni uses to build the various segments.
Betty R. Wishart uses a
great variety of techniques in her piano works, too, and Jeri-Mae G. Astolfi
runs through them skillfully on a new Ravello CD. Here too, however, the
composer seems more preoccupied with the technical methods of creating pieces
than with what those pieces may say to an audience that is unfamiliar with or
uninterested in the scaffolding on which Wishart erects her sonic edifices. Thus,
the persistent use of seconds, fourths and sevenths in several of these works
provides a musical superstructure, but listeners who are not focused on the
intervallic constructs and are simply seeking some sort of composer-to-audience
communication will find little to attract them here. This does not mean the
music is uninteresting: the second and third movements of Sonata II, one being a very short “Capriccio” and the other simply
marked “Finale,” are interestingly involving, and Toccata II is propulsive and effectively declamatory. Remembrance, on the other hand, is a
touch of salon music, gracious and backward-looking both harmonically and
stylistically. But Variations on a Folk
Melody has little to say, and Night
Visions Suite is simply repetitive and dull. The other works here have
elements of interest but do not hold listeners throughout, although every piece
on the CD is constructed with care and an understanding of the piano’s capabilities.
This (+++) CD will interest pianists for some of its technical elements and
some of the contrasts that Wishart builds into her music – in the one-movement Sonata, for example – but people who do
not play the instrument and are primarily attracted by its communicative
potential will not find much here to be particularly appealing.
Margaret Brandman’s music,
both for piano and for other instruments, is more accessible and more
immediately appealing. Brandman herself is a pianist, and on a new Navona CD
she performs her own Autumn Rhapsody
with a fine feel for the work’s gentle lyricism. She and fellow pianist
Marcello Maio together offer Spirit
Visions, a work of considerable tonal color that, like most of Brandman’s
music, reflects her reaction to something specific in her native Australia. But
it is not necessary to know just what that something is in order to appreciate
and enjoy the music – in this, Brandman differs in a positive way from the many
contemporary composers whose works are so tightly tied to specificity of
setting or expression that only those “in the know” can hope to appreciate
them. Brandman understands that, whatever her personal inspiration for a piece
may be, the music needs to reach out to listeners who know nothing about its
genesis if it is to communicate with them. They may never know what led her to
compose a particular work, but if it attracts and moves them, then it has
accomplished something: it has touched people. Brandman certainly wants to do
that, and deserves considerable credit for her efforts to do so. It is not just
her piano works that reach out to good effect. There are three violin-and-piano
pieces here that do so as well, all performed by violinist Vít Mužík and
pianist Lucie Kaucká: Binna Burra
Dreaming, based on a world heritage site but clear in its emotive lyricism
even to those who do not know that; Jicaro
Rhumba D’Amor, which is Latin American rather than Australian in
orientation; and The Eastern Spinebill
and the Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos Herald a Blue Mountains Brush Fire. This
exceptionally long-titled work is actually a violin-and-piano reduction of the
first movement of Brandman’s Firestorm
Symphony, an entirely programmatic work that is also given here in its
orchestral entirety, with the Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Petr
Vronský. The symphony’s three movements refer to the before, during and after
of a dangerous Australian bush fire: “Firestorm Threatening,” “Now the Tears
Are Flowing,” and “All the Trees Are Growing.” It does help in this case to
know how the work came to be, but a generalized acquaintance is enough; the
specifics, which involve a fire that threatened Brandman’s own family home,
help listeners understand the strong emotion built into the work but are not
necessary to hear in it the intensity of the event that inspired it, the
sorrowful response to the devastation, and the eventual rebirth and renewal of
the land. The work is effective on its own musical terms. So are the other
three orchestral pieces here, presented by the same ensemble and conductor: Love Brings Change for string orchestra,
an upbeat work despite its slow tempo (Brandman labels it Adagio for Strings); Undulations,
also for strings, whose two contrasting movements represent the moods of ocean
waves but, as in the other works here, communicate even to listeners who do not
know exactly what inspired the material; and Lyric Fantasy, in which Kaucká joins the orchestra for a different
pair of contrasting movements – with, in this case, some especially attractive
rhythmic approaches and an obbligato piano part that adds to the readily
accessible emotion communicated by the orchestra. This is a (++++) recording
that shows, in many ways, how contemporary composers can be true to modern
harmonic, rhythmic and technical styles while still reaching out to audiences
who are unaware of – or do not care about – the building blocks of the music.
What Brandman has to say will come across differently to different listeners,
but it will come across, which is not
always the case in modern compositions that sometimes seem to be self-involved
and at other times appear to be deliberately off-putting. Brandman’s music is
neither of those; for that reason, it can and likely will appeal to people who
might otherwise think they do not care for contemporary composers’ creations.
No comments:
Post a Comment